The World Wide Web Foundation, pivotal in advancing internet accessibility and safety, is closing after 15 years, shifting its focus as global internet access reaches 70 per cent.
The seeds of the Web were planted much earlier than 1991. Amazingly, a very early version of the World Wide Web was floating around in at least one person's head way back during World War II.
After 15 years working on developing a safer and more accessible internet, the World Wide Web Foundation (WF) is set to close. Foundation co-founders Rosemary Leith and Sir Tim Berners-Lee ...
Last week, the World Wide Web Foundation announced in an open letter (PDF) that it would be “winding down” and “closing [its] ...
World Wide Web, founded by Tim Berners-Lee in 2009, is closing after 15 years dedicated to making the internet more accessible, affordable, and safe. With nearly 70% of the world now online ...
Berners-Lee and Leith cited the dramatically changed landscape of internet access as a key factor in their decision. The Foundation's original mission has evolved with most of the world now online, at ...
Sir Tim Berners-Lee invented the World Wide Web in 1989 at CERN in Switzerland. Since then, through his work with Inrupt Inc, the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C), The Open Data Institute and the World ...
Last week, the World Wide Web Foundation announced in an open letter (PDF) that it would be “winding down” and “closing [its] virtual doors” after 15 years of working to make the web safer ...
Lee, the inventor of the World Wide Web, is set for September 2025. U.S. rights were acquired by Farrar, Straus and Giroux as ...
Long before the advent of the Internet and the World Wide Web, there were other ways to go online, with Ohio-based CompuServe being the first to offer a consumer-oriented service on September 24 ...
Pan Macmillan has acquired the rights to a memoir from the inventor of the World Wide Web Sir Tim Berners-Lee.